| SALVE | Values most of it's healing properties (5) |
| ALOE | ___ Vera: plant popular for its healing properties. (4) |
| NONDENOMINATED | Technical term describing stamps that, like 51-Across, lack a specific value; most U.S. stamps now fall under this category |
| THYME | Plant which has healing properties, they say (5) |
| ACURA | The names of most of its models end in "X" |
| SWIFT | Bird that spends most of its life on the wing (5) |
| ALOES | Succulents with healing properties |
| IDAHO | Most of its panhandle is in the Pacific Time Zone |
| ECOLI | Most of its strains are harmless |
| TEIFI | River that forms the boundary between Ceredigion and Carmarthenshire for most of its 75 mile length |
| PANACEA | The top pilot takes a nap - claims it's healing |
| BEE | Honey-making insect - its product is now being hailed again for its wound-healing properties |
| LOURDES | French town where the grotto, visited by religious pilgrims for the supposed miraculous healing properties of its spring water, is found |
| ECHINACEA | Plant of the daisy family with wound-healing properties (9) |
| HERBAL | ___ medicine, the therapeutic use of plants with healing properties (6) |
| MEDICINAL | Having healing properties, anagram of MANIC DELI (9) |
| ARMADILLO | Burrowing mammal of the Americas, with a covering of horny plates over most of its body (9) |
| ALOEVERA | Juice of a plant used in cosmetics and thought to have healing properties (4,4) |
| ANGELICA | With stalks that are often candied for cakes, the "holy herb", named for its apparently heavenly scent and miraculous healing properties (8) |
| SAINFOIN | A pink-flowered leguminous forage plant whose name, from "wholesome hay", refers to its medicinal or healing properties (8) |